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Chapter 4: Business-Level Strategy

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6. Business-Level Strategies. Two types of competitive advantage firms must choose ... Motel 6. Focused Differentiation. Competitive advantage: Differentiation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 4: Business-Level Strategy


1
Chapter 4 Business-Level Strategy
  • Overview
  • Defining business-level strategy
  • Risks of business-level strategies
  • Differences in business-level strategies
  • 5-Forces
  • Relationship between customers and strategy

2
The Strategic Management Process
3
Introduction
  • Strategy Increasingly important to a firms
    success and concerned with making choices among
    two or more alternatives. Choices dictated by
  • External environment (O and T)
  • Internal resources, capabilities and core
    competencies (S and W)
  • Business level-strategy Integrated and
    coordinated set of commitments and actions the
    firm uses to gain a competitive advantage by
    exploiting core competencies in specific product
    markets/industry
  • How we intend to compete in a specific industry

4
Business-Level Strategies
  • Purpose To create differences between position
    of a firm and its competitors
  • Firm must make a deliberate choice to
  • Perform activities differently
  • Perform different activities
  • How value chain activities will be performed to
    create unique value
  • No strategy better than others
  • Contingent on internal and external environment

5
Business-Level Strategies
  • Two types of competitive advantage firms must
    choose between
  • Cost (Are our costs LOWER than rivals costs?)
  • Uniqueness (Are we DIFFERENT than rivals? How?)
  • Two types of competitive scope firms must
    choose between
  • Broad target
  • Narrow target
  • These combine to yield 5 different generic
    business level strategies
  • Can potentially be used by any organization
    competing in any industry

6
Five Business-Level Strategies
7
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Cost Leadership Strategy
  • Competitive advantage THE low-cost leader and
    operates with margins greater than competitors
  • Competitive scope Broad
  • Integrated set of actions designed to produce or
    deliver goods or services with features that are
    acceptable to customers at the lowest cost,
    relative to competitors
  • No-frills, standardized or commodity-like product
  • Must have competitive levels of quality, service,
    and other features and lowest overall costs
  • Continuously reduce costs of value chain
    activities

8
Examples of Value-Creating Activities Associated
with the Cost Leadership Strategy
9
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Cost Leadership Strategy
  • In relationship to the 5 Forces
  • Existing Rivalry
  • Rivals hesitate to compete on the basis of price
  • Bargaining Power of Buyers (Customers)
  • Powerful buyers can force cost leader to reduce
    prices up to a point
  • Bargaining Power of Suppliers
  • Cost leaders can absorb suppliers price increases
  • Potential Entrants
  • Efficiency can serve as a barrier to entry
  • Product Substitutes
  • Can reduce prices when faced with substitutes
  • Thus built in defense against all 5 forces

10
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Cost Leadership Strategy
  • Competitive Risks
  • Innovations by competitors can quickly eliminate
    cost advantage
  • Too much focus on cost reduction versus
    competitive levels of differentiation
  • Competitors may learn how to successfully imitate
    a cost leaders strategy

11
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Differentiation
  • Competitive advantage Differentiation/uniqueness
  • Competitive scope Broad
  • Integrated set of actions designed by a firm to
    produce or deliver goods or services at an
    acceptable cost that customers perceive as being
    different/unique in ways that are important to
    them
  • Targeted customers perceive product value
  • Customized products differentiating on as many
    features as possible
  • Can differentiate in many ways and in many value
    chain areas

12
Examples of Value-Creating Activities Associated
with the Differentiation Strategy
13
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Differentiation
  • In relationship to the 5 Forces
  • Existing Rivalry
  • Customers are loyal purchasers of differentiated
    products
  • Bargaining Power of Buyers (Customers)
  • Uniqueness and loyalty reduces customers
    sensitivity to price increases
  • Bargaining Power of Suppliers
  • Provide high quality components, driving up
    firms costs
  • Cost may be passed on to customer
  • Potential Entrants
  • Substantial barriers (see above) and would
    require significant resource investment
  • Product Substitutes
  • Customer loyalty effectively positions firm
    against product substitutes

14
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Differentiation
  • Risks
  • Can charge too high of a price premium
  • Differentiation theme no longer valuable to
    customers
  • Over-differentiating
  • Customer experience shows differentiation not
    worth the cost
  • Counterfeiting

15
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Focus strategies
  • In general, the firms core competencies used to
    serve the need of a particular industry segment
    or niche to the exclusion of others.
  • May lack resources to compete in the broader
    market
  • May be able to more effectively serve a narrow
    market segment than larger industry-wide
    competitors
  • Firms may direct resources to certain value chain
    activities to build competitive advantage
  • Large firms may overlook small niches

16
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Focus strategy examples
  • Buyer groups
  • Youths/senior citizens
  • Product line segments
  • Professional painter groups
  • Geographic markets
  • West vs. East coast
  • Definition An integrated set of actions taken to
    produce goods or services that serve the needs of
    a particular competitive segment

17
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Focused Cost Leadership
  • Competitive advantage Low-cost
  • Competitive scope Narrow industry segment
  • Motel 6, Kia
  • Focused Differentiation
  • Competitive advantage Differentiation
  • Competitive scope Narrow industry segment
  • Ritz-Carlton, Apple, Rolls Royce

18
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Focus strategies
  • Risks
  • Same basic risks as broad cost leadership or
    broad differentiation plus
  • A competitor may be able to focus on a more
    narrowly defined competitive segment and
    "outfocus the focuser
  • A company competing on an industry-wide basis may
    decide that the market segment served by the
    focus strategy firm is attractive and worthy of
    competitive pursuit
  • Customer needs within a narrow competitive
    segment may become more similar to those of
    industry-wide customers as a whole

19
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Integrated Cost Leadership/Differentiation
  • Efficiently produce products with differentiated
    attributes
  • Efficiency Sources of low cost
  • Differentiation Source of unique value
  • Involves engaging in primary and support
    activities that allow a firm to simultaneously
    pursue low cost and differentiation
  • Low price with somewhat highly differentiated
    features
  • More value for the money
  • Often called best-cost strategy
  • Example Toyota

20
Types of Business-Level Strategies
  • Integrated Cost Leadership/Differentiation
  • Risks of Integrated Strategies
  • Harder to implement than other strategies
  • Must simultaneously reduce costs while increasing
    differentiation
  • Can get stuck in the middle resulting in no
    advantages and poor performance

21
Other Business-Level Strategies
  • Strategic Alliances and Partnerships
  • Mergers and Acquisitions
  • Vertical Integration
  • Outsourcing
  • Offensive and Defensive Strategies
  • Web Site Strategies
  • First-Mover Advantages and Disadvantages
  • Business Model
  • Functional-Area Strategies

22
Customers and their Relationship with
Business-Level Strategies
  • Strategic competitiveness results when firm can
    satisfy customers by using its competitive
    advantages
  • Five components in customer relationships
  • Effectively managing relationships w/ customers
  • Deliver superior value and build customer loyalty
  • Reach, richness and affiliation
  • Access and connection to customers, depth and
    detail of information, and facilitating
    interactions with customers
  • Who Determining the customers to serve
  • What Determining which customer needs to
    satisfy
  • How Determining core competencies necessary to
    satisfy customer needs
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